Journal article
Patterns of Technical Variation in Chimpanzee Termite Fishing Behavior in Mbam and Djerem National Park, Cameroon
American journal of primatology, v 87(3), pe70014
01 Mar 2025
PMID: 40023876
Abstract
Chimpanzees exhibit considerable inter‐ and intra‐community variation in cognitively complex tool use behaviors, often attributed to social, genetic, and environmental factors. Termite fishing is a well‐documented chimpanzee tool‐using behavior that has been the subject of comparative research exploring behavioral variation between chimpanzee communities. However, termite fishing in the Nigeria‐Cameroon chimpanzee (
Pan troglodytes ellioti
) has been historically underrepresented due to a lack of habituated populations. In this study, we used remote‐activated camera traps at several termite mounds for 3 years to study termite fishing near Ganga Research Station in central Cameroon. We aimed to (1) identify elemental variation in chimpanzee termite fishing techniques at Ganga, an understudied community of
P. t. ellioti
, and (2) compare termite fishing behaviors in the Ganga community among more well‐studied chimpanzee communities. We found 46 different combinations of behavioral elements representing termite fishing techniques used by Ganga chimpanzees (
n
= 9) across five termite mounds. The average technique was between three and four elements long (
x̄
= 3.673), and many chimpanzees had unique personal repertoires. Chimpanzees at Ganga shared the most behavioral similarities with two communities of savanna chimpanzees, Dindefelo and Kayan, and the nearby rainforest community of La Belgique in southern Cameroon. This behavioral similarity between Ganga chimpanzees, who inhabit a complex forest/savanna matrix, and two distant savanna‐dwelling communities suggests similar environmental contexts contribute to termite fishing similarity. These results add to comparative studies of termite fishing behavior and demonstrate the utility of quantitative ethnographic methodology in exploring chimpanzee behavioral variation.
We used motion‐activated camera traps to examine patterns of termite fishing behavior in the Ganga chimpanzee community of the understudied Nigeria‐Cameroon chimpanzee (
Pan troglodytes ellio/
) in central Cameroon.
Ganga chimpanzees demonstrated a total of 46 unique combinations of behavioral elements representing termite fishing techniques, with similarity between individual repertoires following known patterns of social transmission in chimpanzee tool use.
Leveraging quantitative ethnographic methods from the learning sciences, we identified cultural similarities in termite fishing between the Ganga community and other chimpanzee communities that may be related to habitat similarity.
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Details
- Title
- Patterns of Technical Variation in Chimpanzee Termite Fishing Behavior in Mbam and Djerem National Park, Cameroon
- Creators
- Tyler C. Andres-Bray - Drexel UniversityIan Nichols - Virginia TechTabitha Wilke - Texas A&M UniversityMacy Hafner - Drexel UniversityAbigail Jordan - Drexel UniversityAndrea Eysseric - Texas A&M UniversityVivianna Borzym - Texas A&M UniversityEkwoge E. Abwe - Zoological Society of San DiegoBethan Morgan - Zoological Society of San DiegoMary Katherine Gonder (Corresponding Author) - Texas A&M University
- Publication Details
- American journal of primatology, v 87(3), pe70014
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons Inc
- Number of pages
- 17
- Grant note
- Data used in this project were collected with the support of the US Fish and Wildlife Service (grants F18AP00882 and F19AP00620‐01).
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Center for the Advancement of STEM Teaching and Learning Excellence (CASTLE); Biology; College of Arts and Sciences
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:001439874600001
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-86000106408
- Other Identifier
- 991022036304104721
InCites Highlights
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- Collaboration types
- Domestic collaboration
- International collaboration
- Web of Science research areas
- Zoology